Barry Curzon

1.4K posts

Barry Curzon

Barry Curzon

@BarryCurzon

Inscrit le Ocak 2023
11 Abonnements3 Abonnés
UF
UF@UtdFaithfuls·
Palmer: "Yo bro, is Bruno renewing?." Casemiro: "Why do you ask? Didn't you say you have nothing for you in Manchester?" Palmer: "I was joking, bro. Can't survive playing with Garnacho." Casemiro: "You'll play left-back?" Palmer: "Alright! Bet."
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Barry Curzon
Barry Curzon@BarryCurzon·
@GraemeFrew5 @peterrhague The Cambridge ‘office’ of CEO (i.e. not an MD) became a bookable meeting room. Decision making is done in Austin. But if being bought by a Japanese company makes it Japanese, it was a multinational before: it was publicly traded. Also, it’s Arm. Hasn’t been all caps for 9 yrs.
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Peter Hague
Peter Hague@peterrhague·
If this makes you angry, don't look up what happened to SABRE engines and ARM. It'll be bad for your blood pressure.
Maxi@AllForProgress_

A British company called Skycutter, based in the East Midlands, just finished first out of the entire field in the Pentagon's Drone Dominance Program. Score of 99.3 out of 100. The largest order goes to them: two and a half thousand units, an initial Pentagon contract of twenty million dollars, with an option to scale up to two hundred million. Read that and really soak it in. It's something that rarely happens anymore. A small British startup beat the entire American defence-tech industrial complex on its own home turf, in a competition the Pentagon designed itself, against companies that get whatever they ask for from Washington on a Tuesday morning. It looks likely to be followed by something that always happens - Skycutter are, by the looks of things, going to pack up their talent and their operations and move all of it to America. Why? The MoD, they say, is too slow. The procurement cycle is too long. There is no clear pathway from "British company that builds something the world wants" to "British company that the British state buys from in serious quantity at serious speed." No byway through which you move from "A potentially world-toppling IP advantage" to "Complete and deserved domination of the global market." So we are about to lose them. Not because they want to leave, but because the country that produced them cannot organise itself fast enough to keep them. The MoD's response, by the way, was to issue a statement saying it wants the UK to be "the best place in the world to start and grow a defence business." It does not want to do this. Indeed it is difficult to convey, in polite English, how galling that sentence is when read alongside the news it is responding to. You're a serious country? You'd fight for a company like Skycutter. You'd fight to take them if they weren't yours, and you'd fight like mad to keep them if they were. A serious country has someone in Whitehall whose entire fucking job is making sure the next Skycutter doesn't end up in Virginia. We have, instead, a Defence Office for Small Business Growth. Which is the kind of name you give a thing that you created for no purpose other than taking the piss out of it.

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dinosaur_sr
dinosaur_sr@ocdgazer·
@starlitselene @StopTweetingMia if you reread the tweet, you'll notice it says kurt vonnegut. (he wrote cat's cradle, slaughterhouse-five, and a bunch of classics)
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Barry Curzon
Barry Curzon@BarryCurzon·
@LammyTanny60796 @inkblotPrincess Kinbote and Pnin are also unreliable narrators but share traits in common with Nabokov. Are we to believe Humbert is the only one that doesn't?
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Tanny Lammy
Tanny Lammy@LammyTanny60796·
@inkblotPrincess Hubert is an unreliable narrator your not actually meant to see the story as erotic overall
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Roxana Silvia Torres
Roxana Silvia Torres@fabi71104·
@BarryCurzon @javi_pavon5 @rchieyes Somos lo mismo. Descendientes del imperio más majestuoso que la Historia recuerde. Descubridores de un nuevo mundo. Ustedes , solamente iban robando lo que España descubría y evangelizaba.
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Barry Curzon
Barry Curzon@BarryCurzon·
@ChaiDeluxe All their mental energy goes towards finding new ways to be snarky about lusers and preventing them from running programs they need to work
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Barry Curzon
Barry Curzon@BarryCurzon·
@inkblotPrincess In Invitation to a Beheading, Nabokov describes Cincinnatus' daughter as having 'downy' arms, just like he does for Dolores throughout Lolita. Hard not to think that's just how he viewed young girls.
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Roxana Silvia Torres
Roxana Silvia Torres@fabi71104·
@rchieyes UK debe devolver esas islas a sus dueños mientras puedan irse con algo de dignidad.
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Jo🌺🎬
Jo🌺🎬@Goldxn_Violin·
British oomfs what are the most common Americanisms y’all see in media taking place in the UK? Writing something and I want to avoid that best I can.
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Barry Curzon
Barry Curzon@BarryCurzon·
@enalay20 @nanomysou @microgoeswild Underwear because it probably uses oleophilic synthetics which benefit from the greater solvency of hotter water Towels because they can take it
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Enalay
Enalay@enalay20·
@nanomysou @microgoeswild Why do they have to be washed hotter? Anything that is on them have already touched your body and it hasn't killed you yet
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Monkey Man
Monkey Man@Monkeyman4298·
@sansacinema He should quit bitching about Tolkien’s books (which are finished) and focus on his own (which are not finished)
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ser james
ser james@sansacinema·
“Did Aragorn pursue a policy of systematic genocide and kill them? Even the little baby orcs, in their little orc cradles?” is CRAZY 😭😭😭
Fandom Pulse@fandompulse

George R.R. Martin explains how his Game of Thrones characters wielding power badly is his answer to Tolkien: "Ruling is hard. This was maybe my answer to Tolkien, whom, as much as I admire him, I do quibble with. Lord of the Rings had a very medieval philosophy: that if the king was a good man, the land would prosper. We look at real history and it’s not that simple. Tolkien can say that Aragorn became king and reigned for a hundred years, and he was wise and good. But Tolkien doesn’t ask the question: What was Aragorn’s tax policy? Did he maintain a standing army? What did he do in times of flood and famine? And what about all these orcs? By the end of the war, Sauron is gone but all of the orcs aren’t gone – they’re in the mountains. Did Aragorn pursue a policy of systematic genocide and kill them? Even the little baby orcs, in their little orc cradles? Real-life kings had real-life problems to deal with. Just being a good guy was not the answer. You had to make hard, hard decisions. Sometimes what seemed to be a good decision turned around and bit you in the ass; it was the law of unintended consequences. I’ve tried to get at some of these in my books. My people who are trying to rule don’t have an easy time of it. Just having good intentions doesn’t make you a wise king." What do you think Tolkien would have thought about such comments?

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M a t t ™️
M a t t ™️@deepdownderp·
@Y40IFRQTTING Can't deny it's a perfect name though, inventing a new kind of bank is absolutely the closest the UK will ever come to a revolution
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(• ˕ •マ.ᐟ ★
(• ˕ •マ.ᐟ ★@Y40IFRQTTING·
Isn't it insulting that there's a British financial services company called "Revolut"
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jape fitzjapes
jape fitzjapes@ghostsofspring·
went online to order lolita and immediately remembered the eternal conundrum: every book cover choice is actively deranged. not a single normal one among them
jape fitzjapes tweet mediajape fitzjapes tweet mediajape fitzjapes tweet mediajape fitzjapes tweet media
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Tinebob
Tinebob@Tinebobagain·
@Landeur But it was ok for the young to pay for the previous generation? You think it’s the fault of pensioners that governments spent that money on other things, including your education?
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